Life Functions #1
Life Functions #2
Survival Needs
Homeostasis #1
Homeostasis #2
100

This keeps the body’s internal environment separate from the external environment.

What is maintenance of boundaries?

100

The ability of the body to react to stimuli.

What is responsiveness?

100

These give energy to our body cells.  

What are nutrients?

100

 The body’s ability to maintain stable internal conditions.  

What is homeostasis?

100

Homeostasis is off balance; a disease or illness.

What is a homeostatic imbalance?
200

The production of offspring by uniting the sperm cell and the egg cell.

What is reproduction?

200

Examples of this are walking, dancing, writing, blood flowing, and uterus contracting.

What is movement?
200

This helps chemical reactions in our cells to release energy.

What is oxygen?

200

Communication within the body that contains three parts: receptor, control center, and effector.

What is the homeostatic control mechanism?

200

This part determines the level to be maintained in the body.  

What is the control center?

300

This happens when the number of new cells increases faster than the number of dead cells.

What is growth?

300

All chemical reactions happening in the body.

What is metabolism?

300

Your breathing depends on this to inhale oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide.

What is atmospheric pressure?

300

A change (to the normal body function or feeling).

What is a stimulus?

300

This turns off the original stimulus or reduces its intensity, for example when you pull you hand out of a fire to reduce feeling heat.  

What is negative feedback?

400

The tacos you have just eaten is broken down into simple molecules so your body can absorb and use the nutrients.  

What is digestion?

400

Your skin would represent this function?

What is maintenance of bounderies?

400

This makes up 60% - 80% of our bodies and is the basis for all body fluids.  

What is water?

400

This part is the response to the stimulus.  

What is the effector?

400

This enhances the original stimulus and increases its intensity such as childbirth or a blood clot.  

What is positive feedback?

500

Moving substances out of an area or out of the body.

What is excretion?

500

Urination and sweating examples of this function.

What is excretion?

500

When this is too high or too low, molecules and cells are destroyed or do not function properly causing all body activities to stop.

What is appropriate temperature?

500

This part receives information that senses a stimulus.

What is the receptor?

500

These represent nerves in the homeostatic control mechanism diagram?

What are the afferent and efferent pathways?